The official comment from the management of Heaton Park is: “There are no reports of any ghostly activity in Heaton Hall.” Tell this to any local and they will disagree, because Heaton Hall and the surrounding park are full to the brim with ghostly stories.
Heaton Hall and Park sit in the outskirts of Manchester in Prestwich, Bury, providing a welcome green space against the hustle and bustle of the busy roads outside.
The hall is a Grade I listed building built in 1772 and is surrounded by 600 acres of parkland. It became a public park in 1902, and work continues to preserve the hall.
The park hosts large events throughout the year, drawing in hundreds of thousands of visitors; however, some are drawn there for other reasons – the ghost stories. Heaton Hall and Park are rumoured to be the spiritual playground of numerous ghosts, returning from the afterlife to replay key moments from their lives.
A ghost called Alice
A ghost called Alice is thought to haunt Heaton Hall, specifically the Orangery, which was added to the hall in the early nineteenth century. It was once a botanical greenhouse, but now it is an entertainment space.
Alice has been seen wandering around the Orangery. She is described as being in her early twenties and always wearing a nightdress.
She is not solely confined to the hall and can also be spotted walking around the park as though studying the grounds.
Alice is given the slightly off-putting nickname of the Phantom Lady, though one might suggest she is harmless and simply has a fondness for flowers, hence her presence in the Orangery.
The Mourning Lady at Heaton Park Hall
Another female ghost is connected directly with the hall, known as the Mourning Lady. She is seen in the music room looking distraught and wearing a nightdress featuring specks of blood.
She is said to be a young bride who was embracing and loving life as a new wife and mother-to-be. Sadly, as was often the case in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, she died during childbirth.
Her screams and sobs are rumoured to echo around the hall as she mourns the loss of her life and searches for her baby.
The tragic tales continue with that of a soldier who walks around the park. He is said to look confused, as though searching for his fellow soldiers.
It is thought that he was killed on the land in the late eighteenth century after a training drill went badly wrong with a musket. Reports state that he is spotted in uniform, holding a weapon, accompanied by dark, heavy footsteps and the clanking of his musket.
Perhaps one of the most fascinating reports of ghostly sightings relates to chrismas. It is often thought that Halloween is the time of year when the veil between the living and spirit world is at its thinnest, but not so.
Many believe it is far thinner at Christmas due to the winter solstice. This, coupled with the emotion that surrounds the festive period, makes it no surprise to hear about ghostly encounters specific to Christmas.
Heaton Hall and Park are no different, except this one is not of a person but of a carriage. Around Christmas, an old carriage has been spotted heading at speed along the driveway near the hall.
It is reported to be a black carriage, with no horses and no evidence of people – or ghosts – in or around it. The carriage is said to disappear as it gets closer to the hall, as though it were a mirage.
Are these tales simply local folklore, with the managers of Heaton Hall and Park indeed correct, or could it be a case of people not wanting to come forward to have their experiences officially documented?
Whatever the case, the ghost stories have become an integral part of the hall and park. If people come to the park because of those stories, then what is the harm in embracing that?
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